Answer:
The words Feeble and Tremendous both have opposite meanings. They are antonyms.
Explanation:
Feeble means weak or something/someone that has no strength. Tremendous means something that is enormous, huge, or great in size and quantity. These two meanings are opposite and can be used to draw a contrast between two things.
Feeble is a term most times used to qualify a person who is weak, infirm, or sick. When an opinion does not hold water, it can also be referred to as feeble. Tremendous is used to qualify something which is great in quantity or size.
Answer:
A dolphin is swimming in the ocean with a lot of plastic around it. The dolphin gets caught in the plastic and can hardly get the plastic off and swim out. Then the plastic gave a cut on the dolphin's fin.
The sea turtle is swimming through the seaweed a thought a metal piece from a can was food. It chocked, and then it got caught in a net.
Save the turtles
Don't leave trash in the ocean and put ur trash in the Trash Can :)
Use like paper bags rather than plastic bags :)
Pls give brainliest
I don’t understand the question
<span>Onstage stands a table heaped with a feast. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth enter as king and queen, followed by their court, whom they bid welcome. As Macbeth walks among the company, the first murderer appears at the doorway. Macbeth speaks to him for a moment, learning that Banquo is dead and that Fleance has escaped. The news of Fleance’s escape angers Macbeth—if only Fleance had died, he muses, his throne would have been secure. Instead, “the worm that’s fled / Hath nature that in time will venom breed” (3.4.28–29).
Returning to his guests, Macbeth goes to sit at the head of the royal table but finds Banquo’s ghost sitting in his chair. Horror-struck, Macbeth speaks to the ghost, which is invisible to the rest of the company. Lady Macbeth makes excuses for her husband, saying that he occasionally has such “visions” and that the guests should simply ignore his behavior. Then she speaks to Macbeth, questioning his manhood and urging him to snap out of his trance. The ghost disappears, and Macbeth recovers, telling his company: “I have a strange infirmity which is nothing / To those that know me” (3.4.85–86). As he offers a toast to company, however, Banquo’s specter reappears and shocks Macbeth into further reckless outbursts. Continuing to make excuses for her husband, Lady Macbeth sends the alarmed guests out of the room as the ghost vanishes again.
Macbeth mutters that “blood will have blood” and tells Lady Macbeth that he has heard from a servant-spy that Macduff intends to keep away from court, behavior that verges on treason (3.4.121). He says that he will visit the witches again tomorrow in the hopes of learning more about the future and about who may be plotting against him. He resolves to do whatever is necessary to keep his throne, declaring: “I am in blood / Stepped in so far that, should I wade no more, / Returning were as tedious as go o’er” (3.4.135–137). Lady Macbeth says that he needs sleep, and they retire to their bed.</span>